INFLUENCE OF LOW-DOSE CYCLOSPORINE ON THE OUTCOME OF TREATMENT WITH OKT3 FOR ACUTE RENAL ALLOGRAFT REJECTION

Abstract
The outcomes of 51 consecutive patients who received OKT3 for acute renal allograft rejection were analyzed. Thirty patients (group 1), previously maintained on cyclosporine, continued to receive 50% of their maintenance dose of CsA during OKT3; 21 patients (group 2) either never received CsA or temporarily discontinued CsA during OKT3. All patients received low doses of azathioprine and prednisone during OKT3. Rejection was reversed by OKT3 in 90% of patients in group 1 and in 62% of patients in group 2. Continuation of CsA during OKT3 did not increase the incidence of serious infections following OKT3. Serum creatinine concentrations in groups 1 and 2 were comparable before, during, and after therapy with OKT3 suggesting that low doses of CsA do not not induce graft dysfunction during therapy with the monoclonal antibody. In a subset of 22 prospectively studied patients, anti-OKT3 antibodies developed in 2 of 13 patients (15%) who continued low-dose CsA during OKT3 and in 6 of 9 patients (67%) in whom CsA was temporarily discontinued during OKT3. We conclude that administration of low doses of CsA during therapy with OKT3 may reduce the formation of anti-OKT3 antibodies without compromising reversal of rejection by the monoclonal antibody and without increasing the short-term risk of infection or graft dysfunction.